I just received word today via e mail from VINE the service that notifies interested parties and victims of the status of an inmate they want to follow.

Patrick had come up again for parole before January 17, 2017. I had started preparing back in May and June for the protest because the way the parole system works they start pulling records (both pro and con) in August or september before the mandatory date.

It turned out that in the early summer I was notified by My attorney that Patrick had filed a bogus grievance against him with the Texas Bar Association. So, long story short, I had to get another attorney for my protest.

Since I have finally made contact with the victim’s family and work jointly with them to protest Patrick’s parole I notified the family of Jessica Witt what had happened.

On November 17 we were notified by VINE that he had been “set off” for two years (meaning he could not request parole for another 2 years) but then suddenly for no reason we could understand he got another “RE-review” and so we were notified to send in more e mails to the board.

I wasn’t sure exactly why he got another review, but he has become such a “jail house lawyer” and has filed so many federal law suits against various members of the prison staff for “violating his rights” over some internal punishments he had received that if even one of those suits were won, then his disciplinary problem would be taken off his record and he might get a re-review.

Fortunately, though, the two year set off he received was upheld and he didn’t gain much by all his jail house lawyering as it were.

Patrick has been in prison or jail since he was age 17 for all but about 12 months total time he has spent on the outside. I have no confidence that he has learned anything while in prison about how to control his lack of impulse, or that he has grown a conscience.

Another lady I know (from the internet and from news articles about her) was stabbed 19 times by her husband who tried to kill her, then cut himself and tried to claim self defense. He got a 7-20 year sentence. He was coming up for parole this coming year and she had contacted me about how to fight it. His father had written her and begged her not to protest it. As she and I worked on how she should protest it, she received word that her ex husband had died of a heart condition while in prison. Now SHE is FREE. She is released from the worry of having him get out, and of having to fight his release.

I can only imagine her release from the stress of knowing he might get out. I still have that stress to some extent, but I actually no longer live in TERROR. Caution of course, but not terror and will never do so again.

I can’t say I am not relieved that Patrick is inside for another two years, before he can even ask for a parole, but I cannot make my health, my sanity and my life dependent upon what he does or what happens to him.

3 Responses to “PATRICK’S PAROLE DENIED AGAIN”

Joyce, the most grievous aspect of prison life is that there is an extraordinary amount of idle time on a convicts hands. And, because of prisoners’ rights, and all of that nonsense, ANYONE can complain about some issue or ailment, and the have to be treated like a special snowflake.

I am grateful that Patrick has to cool his heels for another 2 years, but I am concerned that the system will eventually release him. If he were to remain in prison until he were 99, he would still be a danger to society, and his extra-curricular activities clearly prove this. From inside prison walls, he has managed to orchestrate a plot of attempted murder, coercion of prison groupies to gather information and report back to him, and to convince others that he is simply misunderstood and deserves anything that he requests, even if it involves other inmates. He is a danger. Period.

What confounds me is why any Parole Board would even consider releasing a career criminal that has obviously demonstrated that he has no concept of rules, boundaries, or lawful behaviors.

Ah, well…………at least it’s another 2 years to prepare, and I’ll be on board with that, as well.

As for the man who died in prison, I can only hope and pray that his victim got every bit of assistance that she needed to put what happened to her in its proper place and to live her life to the very best of her ability. After Victor died, I thought that I would be thrilled – relieved – grateful. Instead, I actually grieved for what “should have been.”

May Patrick never see the light of day outside of prison walls for the rest of his life. That is my hope, prayer, and mantra.

….CRIPES……LOL!!!!!!! With regard to the special snowflakes in prisons with time on their hands, there was once a time when prisoners were worked to exhaustion so that they didn’t have the energy to conspire and plan their little schemes. Of course, those were also times when inmates were beaten to death by prison guards with no expectation of consequences for the guards’ actions.

However, inmates should have NO spare time to machinate their schemes. Patrick is an intelligent fellow, to be sure, but the problem is that his intellect doesn’t take into account the consequences for actions. MANY inmates are of that ilk – they might be smart, but their perceptions are distorted to such a degree that they are a true pathology. They aren’t “insane,” per se, because they absolutely know that what they are doing is against the Law and that society would not accept their actions and behaviors, willingly. But, they do not connect the dots between lawlessness and consequences. It’s just dreadful, really.

So, these people should be put to work – laborious work so that they are physically exhausted.

In Texas they do work the inmates on a hoe squad and at other jobs, and in Arkansas they have a large farm and the inmates work there to raise crops and cattle to help defray their cost of incarceration, and it “ain’t no cake walk”

Apparently Patrick got cross ways with a female guard and got tossed out of the prison craft shop where he makes boots. He filed a federal charge against several guards there and has kept up the suit with thousands of pages of writs and filings which of course my poor mother has financed. Since he has a source of funds to pay for this and infinate time to go to the law library for research he has kept this up for the last 6 or 7 years. Inmates without outside funding can file but the fees have to be paid and if they have no money it slows the process down.

Of course his prison groupie, someone he apparently met on the internet back when he had a smuggled cell phone may be able to help him with funding (or maybe not) but if she gives him a place in Texas to parole to (she is willing to take him in) then the state is more likely to give him a parole than if he would have to be sent to a half way house.

Fortunately Texas has a law that if a sheriff sends a letter to the parole board saying I don’t want him in my county then he cannot come here, and since he has no other place to parole to here (or anyone that would take him in) the prison groupie would be a godsend to him to give him a place to live. Unfortunately for her, she THINKS she knows him and that they “love each other”—when in fact, she HAS NO IDEA WHO OR WHAT HE IS.

After he got out on parole from his aggravated robbery charge, he was on parole which of course PROHIBITS any felony convict on or off parole from having a gun, but he immediately got a gun, and according to the official police reports his buddies (all former convicts) were afraid of him because they said he would jack a round into the chamber over and over and talk about killing Jessica etc. Of course he thought, and I think sill does that NO RULES APPLY TO HIM. He has stolen guns from different people including my step father since he was 14 and started getting into trouble.

It is crazy but believe it or not (and I read this in his letters to Ken Hamilton the former cell mate he sent to take over the family) he considers himself a SUCCESS in life. WHAT??? Yep, he is a big success in his own mind at least. Patrick IS very intelligent, that is no lie, he tests in the 99.9 percentile of IQ tests which means he is as smart as or smarter than 1 out of 999 in a thousand, but even with that kind of smarts, he does NOT GET IT that no one would consider him a “success” in any way, shape or form. He is not even a success as a criminal—DUH!

Research has shown that the right and left brains of psychopaths do not compute too well together as they don’t realize their mistakes and blame them on someone else. Thus they do not learn from those mistakes. But I doubt not that he has gotten a PhD in criminality while he has been incarcerated. But unfortunately, the skills that a small white boy must learn to survive in prison do NOT PLAY WELL ON THE OUTSIDE.

His “posturing” reminds me of my biological father who was also very bright but also a psychopath, but at least my sperm donor had enough common sense to get away with his crimes. The posturing and the “I’m the smartest man in the world” jive did not make him any friends. Many psychopaths can “pass” in society by hiding their ego to some extent, but my sperm donor did manage to keep himself out of prison where Patrick has failed to do so REPEATEDLY. Patrick has repeatedly used people so that he has only my poor mother who has Altzheimer’s and his prison Groupie. She even e mailed me and told me how I don’t know him and SHE knows him sooooo well. Well we will see if he gets out how long it takes him to kill her. as well as Jessica. Unfortunately, I don’t need a crystal ball to know that if she takes him in, it won’t be a month before he is in possession of a gun and even if he has a leg monitor he will still head for Arkansas, but I’m not sure if it will be before or after he kills her. Especially if she is unwilling to go along with him breaking parole rules.

The book “The felon” was a research study of the ideas of what the free world will hold for them when convicts get out, VERSUS the REALITY of having a fat toothless girlfriend and a menial job, instead of the fancy high paying job they imagine they will get and the ####### center-fold girlfriend they are wanting. I’ve actually seen a photo of Patrick’s prison groupie and ####### is not going to recruit her any time soon.

It isn’t that there is anything wrong with being “fat”—and I qualify as OLD and FAT, but the EXPECTATIONS of the psychopath that he DESERVES THE BEST, HOTTEST girlfriend not someone who does not look like a center-fold.

Our society idolizes the “hot” bodies and “fast” lifestyle of the rich and famous, and unfortunately few of “real” people ever even have a chance to live that lifestyle, but the psychopaths think that they DESERVE it and will do whatever they can to get what they want. Many of the psychopaths that can “pass” for a normal person (*at least if you don’t know them well) go into politics or law or other jobs that they can achieve power on a large scale.; My personal opinion is that MOST successful CEOs and politicans are very high in P-traits if not full on psychopaths.

I hope and pray that Patrick doesn’t get out any time soon, Zen, they actually can only hold him until 2032, but he will be on parole until he dies. That’s only another 15 years. But I will do my best to see that he does the entire 15 years and if I pass away before that, then my kids will fight his parole.